Re Tom Paris: What were the good Paris episodes?
Didn't expect you to
challenge me, I was just commenting that I really like the character... but ok, sure. Off the top of my head, some Tom eps I like:
-The Chute (more of a a "Tom and Harry" ep, really)
-Vis a Vis (a weird ep, but... somehow I like it for some reason)
-Thirty Days (I have problems with aspects of it, but overall I quite enjoyed it)
-Drive (again, not JUST a Tom ep, but still a very important one for the development of the character, and a very good ep overall).
These don't really "prove" anything, they are just eps I like. Besides, all I really meant was that I like the
character. I generally like how he was written, I like the actor, etc.
Re Seven of Nine's schizophrenia: Contrast the Seven of Nine in Drone, Collective, Omega Directive, even Voyager Conspiracy with the Seven of Nine in One, Retrospect, Someone to Watch Over Me.
Uh... contrast
what? I don't even see much of a pattern here. Neither the first nor second set of eps you gave particularly have that much in common with each other, in terms of how Seven acts. In BOTH sets, she sometimes acted more like an emotional human, and sometimes didn't. In your examples, when she reacted to something strongly, I usually saw a decent reason (i.e. in "One", she does find herself on this ship, completely alone, for an extended period. That would be a really weird experience for a former drone). Also, she IS a former drone! Let's not forget that. To
expect her to act in a logical/rational way would be silly. Also, in "The Voyager Conspiracy," she was actually suffering from some kind of brain overload due to enhancements to her alcove or something (it's been a while since I saw the ep).
Furthermore, note that I never claimed she wasn't at ALL schizophrenic or written inconsistently. She WAS written inconsistently, to some degree; mainly, there was some jumping around in terms of just how far she'd come in understanding human emotions. All I was doing was pointing out that the notion that she was WAY more inconsistently written than Janeway is your opinion, and not hard fact. My own take is that Janeway was definitely more inconsistently written, and comes off more "schizophrenic",
especially when one considers that Seven is a liberated Borg Drone and Janeway is supposed to be an experienced Starfleet officer.
I've never seen anyone, ever, produce a list like that about Janeway, despite literally claiming they could.
Off the top of my head:
-Suder
murders a guy for looking at him the wrong way, admits to it, and further admits to just BEING a psychotic lunatic in general, and the best Janeway can do is lock him in his room? Yet Tom - for his far lesser transgressions in "Thirty Days" - gets
brig time.
-In "Equinox", she tortures another Starfleet officer to get information out of him. In
many other eps - "The Void" is a notable example - she holds up Starfleet protocols and values as that which must be adhered to no matter the consequences.
-In the pilot, and later whenever it’s brought up, she’s ABSOLUTELY SURE that destroying the Caretaker’s array instead of using it to go home was the right thing to do! The Starfleet thing to do! There can be no rebuttal! …Except in “Night”, when she falls into this depression and questions if it was the right thing to do, calling herself a failure over it.
But it’s ok, because she’s back to thinking it was absolutely the right thing to do by the end of season 7!
Re not writing a legal brief each and every time I give my opinion: If I did, it would be criticized as prolix and pompous. Malevolent gotcha bullshit is not an argument.
What? What are you even referring to here?
Re real problems: If you want to be taken seriously, say something besides stupid cliches.

Fine. The same point made again, without the sarcasm:
"What's going on?" you asked. What's going on is that some people are expressing the opinion that the problems
you see as Voyager's biggest ones may not be the biggest ones, for them. And that some of the things you brush aside as "inanities" are things that WERE problems for them, that affected their enjoyment of the show.
Frankly, I don't think your assertion that "people don't even notice the real problems" even holds water. You say the "real problems" were uneven character development and BS pseudo-science. People blast Voyager for those things
all the time. So where are you even getting the idea that people AREN'T acknowledging those problems?
In any case, I still feel that Voyager had a lot of wasted potential, and was a "pretty good" show that could have been a GREAT show. You're free to disagree, but not to tell my I'm factually incorrect.
So that's why I think Scorpion is the best episode of VOY, because I hate it. Thanks for clearing that up.
